Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review Volume 26 Number 2 Article 4 1-1-2006 Indecent Content on Satellite Radio: Should the FCC Step In Gregory B. Phillips Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/elr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Gregory B. Phillips, Indecent Content on Satellite Radio: Should the FCC Step In, 26 Loy. L.A. Ent. L. Rev. 237 (2006). Available at: https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/elr/vol26/iss2/4 This Notes and Comments is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Reviews at Digital Commons @ Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INDECENT CONTENT ON SATELLITE RADIO: SHOULD THE FCC STEP IN? I. INTRODUCTION In January 2006, Howard Stem uprooted his terrestrial radio roots and transplanted them into satellite radio's fertile ground.' Akin to MTV's prophecy in 1981 that "Video Killed The Radio Star,",2 Stem claimed that "satellite radio will overtake terrestrial radio."3 What motivated Stem to walk away from a broadcast radio show that boasted top rankings and over twelve million listeners nationwide? 4 According to Stem, the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC") and its censoring ways fueled his desire to leave terrestrial radio.5 As it stands today, the FCC is not authorized to regulate indecent content on satellite radio broadcasts.6 But, Congress is currently debating legislation that could create stepping stones for the FCC to impose indecency standards on satellite radio in the same manner that it regulates terrestrial radio.7 Considering that the lure for consumers to abandon free broadcast radio and to subscribe to satellite radio is to hear Stem's no-holds-barred satellite program, this would be Stem's worst nightmare. Stem's employer, Sirius Satellite Radio, might even have more to lose, because without a substantial increase in satellite 1. See Cynthia L. Webb, Star-Power Surge for Satellite Radio, WASHINGTONPOST.COM, Oct. 7, 2004, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2004/lO/07/AR200503300 3480.html. 2. The Buggies' Lyrics to Video Killed The Radio Star, http://www.80smusiclyrics.com/arti sts/buggles.html (last visited Feb. 10, 2006) ("Video Killed The Radio Star stands today as an early synthpop gem, and the fact that it ushered in the video era as the first video ever played on MTV makes it an '80s page must."). 3. Webb, supra note 1. 4. See id. 5. Id. ("Stem portrayed his $500 million dollar deal with Sirius as 'a response to 'censorship' efforts by the Federal Communications Commission'...."). 6. See generally In the Matter of Litig. Recovery Trust, 17 F.C.C.R. 21852, 21856 (2002) (stating "subscription-based services do not call into play the issue of indecency"). 7. Frank Ahrens, Senator Bids to Extend Indecency Rules to Cable, WASH. POST, Mar. 2, 2005, at E l ("Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) told a group of broadcasters yesterday that he wants to extend that [FCC's] authority to cover the hundreds of cable and satellite television and radio channels that operate outside of the government's control... [which] include... XM and Sirius."). 238 LOYOLA OF LOS ANGELES ENTERTAINMENT LAW REVIEW [Vol. 26:237 subscribers, Sirius's $500 million dollar investment in Stem's show would further expand the company's already mounting debt. 8 Accordingly, the question presented in this article is simple: can the FCC impose indecency standards on subscription-based satellite radio companies? This article concludes that regulating satellite radio for indecent content would violate the right to free speech. As background, Part II outlines the FCC's origin and its role in regulating broadcast radio, defines how the FCC and federal courts classify decent, indecent, and obscene speech, and explains the method of judicial review for FCC rulings. Part III discusses satellite radio's origin, identifies the current players, and describes how one can obtain and subscribe to satellite radio. Part IV reviews the FCC's current policy towards satellite radio content and new legislation in Congress that could open the door for the FCC to restrict indecent content on satellite radio. Part V explores the reasons for limiting First Amendment free speech rights to free broadcast media and examines how these reasons apply to other media, such as cable television, the Internet, and telephone messaging services. Finally, Part VI concludes that the reasons for limiting free speech rights in the broadcast radio context do not apply to satellite radio because, unlike broadcast radio, there are less restrictive means to protect children from indecent content on satellite radio than government restrictions. Additionally, although satellite radio's mobility distinguishes it from cable television and the Internet, public nuisance laws would effectively address the issue. II. THE FCC - THE AIRWAVES' GUARDIAN FOR PUBLIC INTEREST As radio's commercial and communication roles expanded in the twentieth century, radio broadcasters faced numerous growing pains that began in the 1920s.9 Uncharacteristic of American industry, radio broadcasters sought help from the federal government to resolve the problems, which prompted then Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover to comment: "I think this is probably the only industry of the United States that is unanimously in favor of having itself regulated."' 0 8. See Webb, supra note 1 ("Sirius, which has lost about $1 billion since 1999, said it agreed to pay $100 million a year [for five years] to fund the Stern show."). 9. See ERWiN G. KRASNOW & LAWRENCE D. LONGLEY, THE POLITICS OF BROADCAST REGULATION 9 (2nd ed. 1978). 10. Id. 20061 INDECENT CONTENT ON SATELLITE RADIO A. Creating the FCC Although today broadcast radio is a vital vehicle for public communication and advertising, it initially developed from a purely maritime and military use. In 1910, radio law focused on maritime safety, requiring "all passenger vessels carrying 50 or more men" to possess radio equipment."' The law designated the Secretary of Commerce and Labor as administrator and the Bureau of Navigation as the enforcer. 12 The Radio Law of 1912, however, consolidated administrative and enforcement duties with the Secretary of Commerce and Labor. 13 Although adequate for the fledgling radio industry, the Secretary's role was limited to 14licensing and maintaining a specific frequency bandwidth for broadcasting. After World War I, radio morphed into an entertainment medium when broadcasters began to disseminate radio programs intended for the general public.'5 The public's appetite for radio grew so much in the 1920s that requests for radio licenses quickly overloaded the available bandwidth. 16 In response, Secretary Hoover added additional frequencies and limited each reception area to a single radio station. 17 Nevertheless, continued bandwidth overcrowding created substantial interference (one broadcaster's transmission overlapping another broadcaster's18 transmission), prompting the industry to seek government assistance. Secretary Hoover convened a series of "radio conferences" from 1922 to 1924 to address the problems. 19 But headway was lost when an Illinois district court ruled that Congress, in enacting the Radio Law of 1912, "'withheld from [the Secretary of Commerce] the power to prescribe additional regulations."' 20 Accordingly, Hoover was denied authority "to 11. See Robert Sears McMahon, FederalRegulation of the Radio and Television Broadcast Industry in the United States 1927-1959, With Special Reference to the Establishment and Operation of Workable Administrative Standards (1959), in DISSERTATIONS IN BROADCASTING 17 (Christopher H. Sterling ed., Arno Press Inc. 1979) (dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy from Ohio State University). 12. Id. 13. Id. 14. See id. at 18. 15. See id. 16. See id. at 19 (stating in 1923 "The number of broadcast stations in the United States jumped from 60 to 588 within a single year."). 17. See KRASNOW & LONGLEY, supra note 9, at 9. 18. See id. ("The industry had come to demand such [government] controls as the increase in stations continued unchecked."). 19. See id. 20. MCMAHON, supra note 11, at 21 (quoting United States v. Zenith Radio Corp., 12 F.2d 616, 617 (1926)). 240 LOYOLA OF LOS ANGELES ENTERTAINMENT LAW REVIEW [Vol. 26:237 regulate radio frequencies, power, or hours of operation," which crippled his effort to maximize the radio industry.2" To overcome the Radio Law's shortcomings, Congress enacted the Radio Act of 1927, which established the Federal Radio Commission ("FRC") to administer and enforce the statute.22 The FRC was comprised of five members appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, and the President designated one member as chairman.23 As the "public convenience, interest, or necessity require[d]," the FRC was empowered to (1) classify broadcast power and hours of services, (2) regulate stations' broadcasting equipment, (3) draft regulations to "prevent or at least lessen interference between stations and establish zones which they were to serve," and (4) require broadcasters to keep accurate records regarding programs broadcast.24 The FRC lacked the authority to censor radio broadcasts or "interfere with the right of free speech by means of radio. 25 Despite the FRC's good intentions, a lack of funding, an overwhelming workload, a resistance from broadcasters to follow its decrees, and continued congressional pressure prevented the commission from obtaining its goals.26 Thus, in 1933, President Roosevelt requested Secretary of Commerce Daniel Roper to study and recommend a better system for regulating radio broadcasting.27 Secretary Roper's subsequent report helped spawn the Federal Communications Act of 1934 ("FCA").28 The FCA combined the regulatory duties of the FRC, the Interstate Commerce Commission, the postmaster general, and the President into one administrative agency: the FCC.
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